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  • What does bidding dull care begone mean? From O Henry story The . . .
    On the evening that the material allegation of facts begins, Hedges was bidding dull care begone in the company of five or six good fellows -- acquaintances and friends who had gathered in his
  • What does Be gone mean in this expression [closed]
    To go is, among other meanings, to leave or depart Asking someone to be gone means that you want them to have left or departed In other words, be gone (or, as it's also written, begone) means "go away "
  • word choice - Are gone or be gone in this sentence? - English . . .
    Are both alternatives correct in this sentence? Let's enjoy the party now Later, when all the guests are gone, we can talk about this Let's enjoy the party now Later, when all the guests be gone
  • Has begun vs began - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    Does the it of your sentence refer to the year (i e 2012 was the year that the program began)? If this is your intended meaning then you don't need the word first (unless the program began again later), and the verb must be began not has begun
  • Had Begun vs Began - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    The answer should be began If it were had begun, then the sentence would need to continue to mention something else that happened at that time Such as: Walker Lee had begun his career in hand-forged ironwork at the age of 30 when meteors started falling from the sky (Or anything else ) The use of had begun acts as a link to another event Neither of the verb forms is affected by what is
  • sentence structure - One such+noun vs such a an + noun - English . . .
    There's two different meanings of "such" used here, as described in Merriam-Webster: such adjective 2 : of the character, quality, or extent previously indicated or implied in the past few years many such women have shifted to full-time jobs 3 : of so extreme a degree or quality never heard such a hubbub The structure [ "such" + noun phrase ] can have meaning 2 or 3, depending on the
  • Choosing between error, inconsistency, discrepancy
    Purely a personal perspective, but I'm inclined to see inconsistencies in such contexts as referring to elements within the report which conflict with other elements in the report, whereas discrepancies is more likely to refer to elements which conflict with known real-world facts
  • grammar - Hope + future tense (will) Hope + present tense - English . . .
    To hope means to wish for something to happen - and since you wouldn't hope for something you already have, that something is of course going to happen in the future It's redundant to include will, but not incorrect Extra words like this can serve as emphasis, or to provide less chance of being misunderstood if the listener isn't paying attention, etc , or to maintain rhythmic cadence in a
  • It wasnt until - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    It wasn't until the match was over (ONLY AT THE END) that he realised he'd strained a muscle = He realised it then, and not after some time when it had been over for a while The second example is slightly different
  • Does I slept in imply I did it on purpose or by accident?
    @StuartF As a Brit I would more likely use "oversleep" for accidental Maybe this is an Americanism that has crept into my vocabulary but I don't think any Brit would find it unusual As for the opposite, I'm thinking of that famous scene from the first Home Alone film where the (American) parents shout "WE SLEPT IN!" So while there might be more of a tendancy towards one or the other among





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